https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2021-898/

The impact of stratospheric aerosol intervention on the North Atlantic and
Quasi-Biennial Oscillations in the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison
Project (GeoMIP) G6sulfur experiment

Andy Jones, Jim M. Haywood, Adam A. Scaife, Olivier Boucher, Matthew Henry, Ben
Kravitz, Thibaut Lurton, Pierre Nabat, Ulrike Niemeier, Roland Séférian, Simone
Tilmes, and Daniele Visioni

Abstract.
As part of the Geoengineering Model Intercomparison Project a numerical
experiment known as G6sulfur has been designed in which temperatures under
a high-forcing future scenario (SSP5-8.5) are reduced to those under a
medium-forcing scenario (SSP2-4.5) using the proposed geoengineering
technique of stratospheric aerosol intervention (SAI). G6sulfur involves
introducing sulphate aerosol into the tropical stratosphere where it
reflects incoming sunlight back to space, thus cooling the planet. Here we
compare the results from six Earth-system models which have performed the
G6sulfur experiment and examine how SAI affects two important modes of
natural variability, the northern wintertime North Atlantic Oscillation
(NAO) and the Quasi-Biennial Oscillation (QBO). Although all models show
that SAI is successful in reducing global-mean temperature as designed,
they are also consistent in showing that it forces an increasingly positive
phase of the NAO as the injection rate increases over the course of
the 21st century,
exacerbating precipitation reductions over parts of southern Europe
compared with SSP5-8.5. In contrast to the robust result for the NAO there
is less consistency for the impact on the QBO, but the results nevertheless
indicate a risk that equatorial SAI could cause the QBO to stall and become
locked in a phase with permanent westerly winds in the lower stratosphere.

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